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https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/metaverse-vs-multiverse-vs-multi-metaverse/
Metaverse, multiverse… aren’t they the same thing? Well, not
quite. The difference lies between where we are now and where we may be going,
but there’s a twist.
Find out the difference between the multiverse and the
metaverse in this post.
TechCrunch states that we’re currently in the
multiverse era of technology, where “the virtual worlds of games expand to
become mainstream hubs for social interaction and entertainment.”
Social media platforms, online games, and massive
multiplayer online games are all part of the multiverse.
“The virtual worlds of multiplayer games — still accessed
from phones, tablets, PCs and consoles — are our stepping stones during this
next phase,” TechCrunch’s Eric Peckham says. “Multiverse virtual
worlds will come to function almost like new countries in our society,
countries that exist in cyberspace rather than physical locations but have
complex economic and political systems that interact with the physical world.”
The metaverse on the other hand is a shared, persistent
digital environment where users can work, play sports, go to concerts, watch
movies, shop, or just hang out.
“Tech companies from Microsoft to Meta to Epic Games are
putting the technology together to build the metaverse, but we likely won’t see
it for another decade or so,” says futurist Bernard Marr.
“The technology will likely combine aspects of social media,
cryptocurrencies, AR, VR and online gaming so users can act and interact
virtually.”
The entire metaverse will be interconnected or ordered into
one universe to provide the best possible experience for users who want to move
through the virtual world via their avatar.
So, what’s the difference?
According to Marr, the metaverse is the conceptual idea that
one day we will have an entirely connected virtual world that enables users to
seamlessly move from one part (e.g., gaming) to another (e.g., dating,
shopping, working, or anything else).
“The multiverse is more disconnected, where individual
digital ecosystems exist, but they don’t offer people the ability to seamlessly
move between them or have a unified user experience.”
This is where we are today, where you can have a virtual
work environment, gaming environments like Fortnite or Roblox, and social
environments Meta’s Horizon, but they don’t connect.
A unified metaverse as projected in fiction like Ready
Player One is a long way off. Marr thinks it unlikely it will ever happen.
Instead, he predicts a world of multiple environments that could be described
as metaverses but that might be competing with each other.
“I would describe this as a multi-metaverse world, where
companies like Meta might build one metaverse, and others like Tencent build
another.”
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